COMMENT: A recent post high­lights a claim that LAPD wire­tap tapes of Man­son Fam­ily mem­ber and con­victed killer Charles “Tex” Wat­son indic­tates the pos­si­bil­ity that there may be 12 more vic­tims of the Man­son clan whose cases have yet to be prop­erly investigated.

One case that has more to it than reaches the eye is the mur­der of Sharon Tate. Deeply involved with Robert F. Kennedy’s pres­i­den­tial cam­paign in the Los Ange­les area, Tate had been present at a din­ner shortly before Kennedy’s assas­si­na­tion at which he report­edly said that he would re-open the inves­ti­ga­tion into his brother’s mur­der after get­ting into the White House.

Her mur­der by the Man­son cadre elim­i­nated an impor­tant poten­tial wit­ness in the Robert Kennedy case.

Inter­est­ingly and sig­nif­i­cantly, an arti­cle appeared in a right-wing mag­a­zine out of South­ern Cal­i­for­nia called Aware penned by one Ed But­ler in which he claimed that the Tate/La Bianca killings were clearly the work of the Black Pan­thers or other “Black Militants.”

Sharon Tate’s Corpse

Recall that the Man­son killings were intended to pro­voke the group’s vision of a race war called “Hel­ter Skel­ter” and ref­er­ences to which might be seen as lead­ing in the direc­tion of “black mil­i­tants” were scrawled in blood at the crime scene.

But­ler, it should be noted, is float­ing the cover story of the Man­son killings well before the arrests were made in the case!Fur­ther­more, But­ler is no stranger to the annals of polit­i­cal intrigue.

With long-standing con­nec­tions to the intel­li­gence com­mu­nity and the far right, Butler’s name is one of a num­ber of evi­den­tiary trib­u­taries that link the assas­si­na­tions of both Kennedy brothers.

Oper­at­ing in con­junc­tion with an intel­li­gence com­mu­nity and far-right mil­lieu in New Orleans, But­ler arranged a press con­fer­ence on WDSU in New Orleans. Fea­tur­ing the osten­si­ble left­ist Lee Har­vey Oswald and an anti-Castro Cuban named Car­los Bringuier (of the CIA con­trolled DRE), the inter­view high­lights Oswald’s alleged left­ist sym­pa­thies. In the talk, Bringuier asks Bringuier if he agrees with Fidel Cas­tro that Pres­i­dent Kennedy was “a ruf­fian and a thief.” This inter­view was broad­cast all over the United States on the evening of Pres­i­dent Kennedy’s assassination.

Shortly after Robert Kennedy’s assas­si­na­tion, But­ler helped facil­i­tate a press con­fer­ence staged by Amer­i­can United (run by far right activists John Stein­bacher and Anthony Hilder) at which an anti-Castro Cuban named Jose Anto­nio Duarte linked Sirhan with the polit­i­cal left and the Soviet bloc.

But­ler, again, also floated the disinformation/cover story for the Tate/La Bianca killings well before the arrests of the Man­son sus­pects. Mis­cel­la­neous Archive Show M16 sets forth the But­ler con­nec­tions to the JFK, RFK and Tate/La Bianca inves­ti­ga­tions. Side b and side c con­tain sub­stan­tive, rel­e­vant discussion.

George Joan­nides was CIA liai­son to the anti-Castro Cuban groups includ­ing the DRE to which Car­los Bringuier belonged and also in charge of psy­cho­log­i­cal war­fare for the CIA’s stateion JM Wave in Miami. Joan­nides was appointed as the liai­son between the Agency and the House Select Com­mit­tee on Assas­si­na­tions. (More about this in FTR #698.)

EXCERPT: New video and pho­to­graphic evi­dence that puts three senior CIA oper­a­tives at the scene of Robert Kennedy’s assas­si­na­tion has been brought to light. The evi­dence was shown in a report by Shane O’Sullivan, broad­cast on BBC News­night.

It reveals that the oper­a­tives and four uniden­ti­fied asso­ciates were at the Ambas­sador Hotel, Los Ange­les in the moments before and after the shoot­ing on 5 June, 1968. The CIA had no domes­tic juris­dic­tion and some of the offi­cers were based in South-East Asia at the time, with no rea­son to be in Los Angeles.

Kennedy had just won the Cal­i­for­nia Demo­c­ra­tic pri­mary on an anti-War ticket and was set to chal­lenge Nixon for the White House when he was shot in a kitchen pantry. A 24-year-old Pales­tin­ian, Sirhan Sirhan, was arrested as the lone assas­sin and note­books at his house seemed to incrim­i­nate him. How­ever, even under hyp­no­sis, he has never been able to remem­ber the shoot­ing and defense psy­chi­a­trists con­cluded he was in a trance at the time. Wit­nesses placed Sirhan’s gun sev­eral feet in front of Kennedy but the autopsy showed the fatal shot came from one inch behind. Dr Her­bert Spiegel, a world author­ity on hyp­no­sis at Colum­bia Uni­ver­sity, believes Sirhan may have been hyp­not­i­cally pro­grammed to act as a decoy for the real assassin.

The report is the result of a three-year inves­ti­ga­tion by film­maker Shane O’Sullivan. He reveals new video and pho­tographs show­ing three senior CIA oper­a­tives at the hotel. Three of these men have been pos­i­tively iden­ti­fied as senior offi­cers who worked together in 1963 at JMWAVE, the CIA’s Miami base for its Secret War on Cas­tro. David Morales was Chief of Oper­a­tions and once told friends: ‘I was in Dal­las when we got the son of a bitch and I was in Los Ange­les when we got the lit­tle bas­tard.’ Gor­don Camp­bell was Chief of Mar­itime Oper­a­tions and George Joan­nides was Chief of Psy­cho­log­i­cal War­fare Oper­a­tions. Joan­nides was called out of retire­ment in 1978 to act as the CIA liai­son to the Con­gres­sional inves­ti­ga­tion into the JFK assas­si­na­tion. [Empha­sis added.] Now, we see him at the Ambas­sador Hotel the night a sec­ond Kennedy is assassinated. . . .

EXCERPT: For six years, the agency has fought in fed­eral court to keep secret hun­dreds of doc­u­ments from 1963, when an anti-Castro Cuban group it paid clashed pub­licly with the soon-to-be assas­sin, Lee Har­vey Oswald. The C.I.A. says it is only pro­tect­ing legit­i­mate secrets. But because of the agency’s his­tory of stonewalling assas­si­na­tion inquiries, even researchers with no use for con­spir­acy think­ing ques­tion its stance.

The files in ques­tion, some released under direc­tion of the court and hun­dreds more that are still secret, involve the curi­ous career of George E. Joan­nides, the case offi­cer who over­saw the dis­si­dent Cubans in 1963. In 1978, the agency made Mr. Joan­nides the liai­son to the House Select Com­mit­tee on Assas­si­na­tions — but never told the com­mit­tee of his ear­lier role.

That con­ceal­ment has fueled sus­pi­cion that Mr. Joannides’s real assign­ment was to limit what the House com­mit­tee could learn about C.I.A. activ­i­ties. The agency’s decep­tion was first reported in 2001 by Jef­fer­son Mor­ley, who has doggedly pur­sued the files ever since, rep­re­sented by James H. Lesar, a Wash­ing­ton lawyer spe­cial­iz­ing in Free­dom of Infor­ma­tion Act lawsuits. . . .

. . . . In August 1963, Oswald vis­ited a New Orleans shop owned by a direc­torate offi­cial, feign­ing sym­pa­thy with the group’s goal of oust­ing Mr. Cas­tro. A few days later, direc­torate mem­bers found Oswald hand­ing out pro-Castro pam­phlets and got into a brawl with him. Later that month, he debated the anti-Castro Cubans on a local radio station.

In the years since Oswald was named as the assas­sin, spec­u­la­tion about who might have been behind him has never ended, with var­i­ous the­o­ries focus­ing on Mr. Cas­tro, the mob, rogue gov­ern­ment agents or myr­iad com­bi­na­tions of the above. Mr. Mor­ley, one of many writ­ers to become entranced by the story, insists he has no the­ory and is seek­ing only the facts.

His law­suit has uncov­ered the cen­tral role in over­see­ing direc­torate activ­i­ties of Mr. Joan­nides, the deputy direc­tor for psy­cho­log­i­cal war­fare at the C.I.A.’s Miami sta­tion, code-named JM/WAVE. He worked closely with direc­torate lead­ers, doc­u­ments show, cor­re­spond­ing with them under pseu­do­nyms, pay­ing their travel expenses and achiev­ing an “impor­tant degree of con­trol” over the group, as a July 1963 agency fit­ness report put it.

Fif­teen years later, Mr. Joan­nides turned up again as the agency’s rep­re­sen­ta­tive to the House assas­si­na­tions com­mit­tee. Dan Hard­way, then a law stu­dent work­ing for the com­mit­tee, recalled Mr. Joan­nides as “a cold fish,” who firmly lim­ited access to doc­u­ments. Once, Mr. Hard­way remem­bered, “he handed me a thin file and just stood there. I blew up, and he said, ‘This is all you’re going to get.’ ”

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